Research paper topics, free example research papers

King Lear And Cordelia Death - 1,282 words
King Lear And Cordelia Death King Lear is a
tragedy unlike any other written by William
Shakespeare. It focuses on the psychological
downfall of a powerful King. It proves that as
long as a nation has a king on the throne all is
well, but as soon as a king steps off the throne
nothing but chaos transpires. The downfall of the
king results in the downfall of the kingdom. More
importantly, it focuses on the relationship
between parent and child. This is proven in two
plots with the most important being the
relationship between Cordelia and King Lear. Lear
goes through a period of great mental instability
in which he gives up his throne, gives up his
daughter Cordelia, and also gives up his san ...
Related: cordelia, king lear, lear, william shakespeare, northrop frye

Villain, Where Art Thou - 605 words
Villain, Where art thou? Ladies and Gentleman of
the jury there is not a villain in the play,
"Romeo and Juliet." As Northrop Frye states in his
review, ". . . in this play there doesn't seem to
be the clearly marked villain that we find in so
many tragedies." (Frye 28) This paper presents the
facts that prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that
Frye's assertion is correct because the definition
of a villain is a wicked or vile person. Mercutio,
the nurse, Tybalt, and Romeo like a red herring
seem like villains and could trick careless
readers into believing that they are villains.
Mercutio's wit overshadows his violent side. "O
calm, dishonorable, vile submission! Alla stoca
carries it away. Ty ...
Related: thou, romeo and juliet, northrop frye, social class, juliet

Villain, Where Art Thou - 605 words
Villain, Where art thou? Ladies and Gentleman of
the jury there is not a villain in the play,
"Romeo and Juliet." As Northrop Frye states in his
review, ". . . in this play there doesn't seem to
be the clearly marked villain that we find in so
many tragedies." (Frye 28) This paper presents the
facts that prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that
Frye's assertion is correct because the definition
of a villain is a wicked or vile person. Mercutio,
the nurse, Tybalt, and Romeo like a red herring
seem like villains and could trick careless
readers into believing that they are villains.
Mercutio's wit overshadows his violent side. "O
calm, dishonorable, vile submission! Alla stoca
carries it away. Ty ...
Related: thou, northrop frye, social class, romeo and juliet, conscious

William Shakespeare - 983 words
... ctions and consequences. In Northrop a point
of fact is made; Caesar influences the whole play,
for he appears after his death as a blood stained
corpse and as a ghost before battle (Northrop 28).
Both Brutes and Cassias dying are conscious of
Caesar; both men even speak to Caesar as if he
were present. In other ways Julius Caesar is
shaped differently from the histories and
tragedies that precede, as if in manner as in
subject matter Shakespeare was making decisive
changes (Northrop 33). The scene moves only from
Rome to the battlefield, and with this new
setting, language becomes more restrained, firmer
and sharper. Extensive descriptive images are few,
and single words such as Roman, ...
Related: shakespeare, william shakespeare, williams shakespeare, merry wives of windsor, social status